The normal location for content storage is the home directory of
the WACS user account which is created when you do an install from packages.
If you do a manual install, or use the obsolete easyinstall script, you
need to check whether this has been created and if not, create it.
Obviously putting a large amount of multi-media
material into the home directory area of the server may not be desirable
so you may wish to consider where it should be placed. As mentioned
elsewhere this could be a seperate volume or group of volumes on an
LVM partition, an external disc drive or even another remote server
or NAS server supporting NFS protocols. These locations are configured
in the wacs.cfg
file and can easily be altered.
The important things are to ensure that the location of the storage
is specified in the Wacs configuration file (usually
/etc/wacs.d/wacs.cfg
ahead of adding the first content and
that it remains accessible at the same file system location throughout.
This means either arranging for it to be mounted, etc as necessary at
boot time or deploying an automounter such as autofs or
am-utils to do that for you.
In the case of a WACS system on a web hosting provider, you are unlikely to be able to access the filespace via local network style file sharing mechanisms such as NFS and CIFS. You will have to upload content instead using ftp, sftp or web browser uploads and import it using WACS's extensive XML import facilities or the collection management tools.